The name '''Khanun''' ({{langx|th|ขนุน}}, {{IPA|th|kʰā.nǔn|pron}}) has been used for four tropical cyclones in the western North Pacific Ocean. The name was contributed by Thailand and means jackfruit (''Artocarpus heterophyllus'') in Thai.<ref>{{Cite web| title= List of names for tropical cyclones adopted by the Typhoon Committee for the western North Pacific and the South China Sea|url=https://www.jma.go.jp/jma/jma-eng/jma-center/rsmc-hp-pub-eg/tyname.html|archive-date= August 5, 2005|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20050805083712/https://www.jma.go.jp/jma/jma-eng/jma-center/rsmc-hp-pub-eg/tyname.html |access-date=March 16, 2026 |website=Japan Meteorological Agency}}</ref>
* Typhoon Khanun (2005) (T0515, 15W, Kiko), struck China as a Category 3 typhoon. * Severe Tropical Storm Khanun (2012) (T1207, 08W, Enteng), the first tropical cyclone to directly impact Korea in two years, claimed 89 lives. * Typhoon Khanun (2017) (T1720, 24W, Odette), a mid-range Category 2 typhoon that affected Hainan island as a weak tropical storm. * Typhoon Khanun (2023) (T2306, 06W, Falcon), a potent Category 4 typhoon that lingered in the Okinawa Islands, and eventually struck Korea.
{{S-start}} {{Succession box|before=Bori|title=Pacific typhoon season names|years=Khanun|after=Lan}} {{S-end}}
==References== {{reflist}}
{{Storm index|Khanun}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Khanun}} Category:Pacific typhoon set index articles